Tennis News

From around the world

Murray beats Stepanek in five sets

  • Posted: May 24, 2016
French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 22 May to 5 June
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, the BBC Sport website and app.

Andy Murray finally beat 37-year-old qualifier Radek Stepanek in five sets to avoid a shock first-round defeat at the French Open in Paris.

The British world number two trailed two sets to one when play was suspended on Monday because of bad light.

Murray, 29, won the fourth set but was pushed hard by his Czech opponent before winning the deciding set to clinch a 3-6 3-6 6-0 6-3 7-5 victory.

British number two Aljaz Bedene reached the second round for the first time.

The last time Murray lost in the first round of a Grand Slam was in 2008.

A three-time French Open semi-finalist, he has now come from two sets down to win nine times in Grand Slam matches.

Murray will next face French wildcard Mathias Bourgue, who is ranked 164 in the world.

  • Round-up: Nadal thrashes Groth but Kerber goes out
  • Scores and results: Today’s matches

When play began on Tuesday, Murray survived two break points in his opening service game before levelling the match by breaking.

But Stepanek, the oldest man in the draw, continued to frustrate the Briton with some inspired shot-making in a nervy fifth set.

Murray was two points from defeat when serving at 4-5 but held on and broke in the next game.

He double-faulted on his first match point but sealed victory after three hours and 41 minutes when Stepanek netted an attempted drop-volley two points later.

Murray, who sportingly applauded Stepanek off the court, said: “He had an extremely bad injury last year and still at 37 coming out and fighting like that, playing that way, it’s unbelievable.

“I don’t expect to be doing that myself at that age. I’m just glad I managed to get through.

“He’s always been extremely difficult to play. I wasn’t able to dictate many of the points, I wasn’t in a great rhythm, and that’s credit to him and the way that he played. I fought extremely hard today and I’ll get a chance to play again tomorrow.”

Analysis

BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller

“Stepanek played a magnificent final set: serving and volleying himself out of trouble when the occasional break point down and engaging theatrically with the crowd, which warmed to a 37-year-old who is a real craftsman of his trade.

“Murray was two points from defeat at 4-5 deuce in that deciding set, but it is notable that with his French Open on the line he did not face a single break point in the final set.

“Stepanek’s poor final service game cost him dear, and despite serving a double fault on his first match point, Murray did not let him off the hook. The reserves of nervous energy have been depleted, but rather that than an early start to the grass-court season.”

British players at the French Open
Draw In Out
Women: Heather Watson, Johanna Konta, Laura Robson Naomi Broady (first round)
Men: Kyle Edmund, Aljaz Bedene, Andy Murray None

Bedene recovers from poor start

The British number two began his match against Austrian qualifier Gerald Melzer with two double faults and lost the first eight points.

But he was the better player after that and came through 4-6 6-3 6-4 6-4 to reach the second round for the first time.

Bedene, who is being coached on a temporary basis by GB Davis Cup captain Leon Smith, will play Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta in the second round.

Edmund to face big-serving Isner

Edmund will take on 15th seed John Isner in the second round after the American fired down 40 aces to overcame John Millman of Australia.

Isner won 6-7 (4-7) 7-6 (12-10) 7-6 (9-7) 7-5 in another match played over two days.

Edmund beat Georgian qualifier Nikoloz Basilashvili on Monday.

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Ray Wood: The father trying to turn his seven-year-old into a champion

  • Posted: May 24, 2016
5 live Tennis Special
Listen again to Ray and Livinnia’s full story on BBC iPlayer

Livinnia Wood comes across as a very normal seven-year-old. She has four best friends and likes learning about parts of the body.

But at 6am most days, she starts training, and says her ambition is to be better than Margaret Court, who has more Grand Slam singles titles than even Serena Williams.

Liv is the daughter of Ray, a lifelong Liverpool supporter who has been a coach at both Leicester City and Paris St-Germain.

He has a dream – to “create two of the greatest female tennis players the planet has ever seen”.

Ray, who has You’ll Never Walk Alone tattooed on his left arm, lives in Brisbane with his Australian wife Angela, Liv and her two-year-old sister Paloma.

When I met up with them in Melbourne during this year’s Australian Open, Ray came across as a likeable and unassuming family man.

Yet, as he talks, you soon realise he is making some jaw-dropping claims.

“I think I could quite easily, over a 10 to 15-year period, create a champion in any sport,” he tells me by the outside courts, as the second round unfolds.

“Talent is made, it’s not born. I think if my Dad had spent the time with me at such a young age, I would have played for Liverpool. I would have played for England without a shadow of a doubt.”

Ray, 36, says he might have chosen another sport for his daughters. It didn’t have to be tennis.

“We could have gone down the route of ice-skating with Livi, and Livi would be a champion ice skater, but we chose the route of tennis and she’ll be a champion in that,” he says.

“I would put her up against any girl seven years of age around the globe and be confident she would beat them.”

Listen: Father believes daughters can be new Williams sisters

Liv, whose favourite players Serena Williams and Novak Djokovic are already world number one, first picked up a racquet at the age of three and is currently doing 12 hours of sport a week.

About two thirds of that is on the court, with the rest of the time devoted to gymnastics and athletics to build up her agility, balance and co-ordination.

Training begins while her friends are still sleeping and continues after school – as well as on Christmas Day.

“It just feels normal to me,” Liv explains.

“I hit on probably every celebration of the year. I feel a bit tired but when we start getting a little rally, I feel like I’ve got more energy to start moving around on the court.”

Tennis-free holidays, birthday parties and lollies are also part of Liv’s life and, once a week, Ray puts on a “fun” session in which his daughter tries to burst balloons with her serve.

“Sometimes he keeps it fun and sometimes he doesn’t,” Liv says.

“Sometimes he hits funny shots at me and sometimes I do trick shots at Daddy. Sometimes he serves with his right hand – he’s left-handed and I’m right-handed – and sometimes I hit with my left hand.”

Youngest female Grand Slam winners
Name Age Tournament
Martina Hingis 16 Australian Open 1997
Monica Seles 16 French Open 1990
Tracy Austin 16 US Open 1979
Maria Sharapova 17 Wimbledon 2004
Arantxa Sanchez 17 French Open 1989
Serena Williams 17 US Open 1999
Steffi Graf 17 French Open 1987

Ray, who is also a consultant to a large sports development firm, has drawn up a plan for both of his daughters that runs to more than 100 pages.

He believes the opportunity and coaching he is offering them – he now has tennis qualifications to add to his experience of working in elite level football – combined with the environment of Australia and a lot of hard work will turn them into champions.

Richard Williams has set the bar extraordinarily high with Venus and Serena, but Wood believes he can provide his girls with a higher quality of coaching in their early years.

“I think 99% of the population believe that if your dad is a lorry driver and your mum works in a bottle shop, then that’s pretty much all you’re going to do in life,” he says.

“There’s nothing wrong with having an office job, but we don’t want Liv to have an office job.

“We don’t want her to work 14 or 15-hour days. I can’t think of a better life than being out playing sport.

“I’ve been involved in a family who’ve had a lot of illnesses through various cancers, smoking and drinking and we want to ward the girls away from that.”

Liv, who is now on the books of an Australian talent agency which has also worked with Lleyton Hewitt, is currently playing against children three years her senior and winning far more than she loses.

Australia will be the family’s home for the next few years, but the long-term plan is to take them out of school, employ private tutors and possibly move to Spain.

The family has sent footage of Liv in action to the Rafa Nadal academy in Mallorca.

Even if the chance of both girls making it to the top are incredibly small, Paloma has already started gymnastics and will begin tennis in December at the age of two-and-a-half (six months younger than her sister was).

The concept of pushing children so firmly down a specific route from such an early age will cause discomfort among some.

Ray is adamant, though, that neither girl will be forced to continue training against their will and believes he is acting in their interests and not out of frustration at the professional football career that eluded him.

“She wants to please Dad, without a shadow of a doubt,” he admits.

“But if you were to go into Liv’s bedroom, we don’t control anything in there. She’s got posters of all the players up there.

“We actually broke her off for six months just to see if she asked to do it again.

“The big focus we have is that if it’s not fun, the girls don’t do it.

“She understands she’s got to work hard and there are some sacrifices at a young age, but she already has a mindset that if she works hard, she’s going to get out of life what she wants.”

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The father trying to turn his seven-year-old into a champion

  • Posted: May 24, 2016
5 live Tennis Special
Listen again to Ray and Livinnia’s full story on BBC iPlayer

Livinnia Wood comes across as a very normal seven-year-old. She has four best friends and likes learning about parts of the body.

But at 6am most days, she starts training, and says her ambition is to be better than Margaret Court, who has more Grand Slam singles titles than even Serena Williams.

Liv is the daughter of Ray, a lifelong Liverpool supporter who has been a coach at both Leicester City and Paris St-Germain.

He has a dream – to “create two of the greatest female tennis players the planet has ever seen”.

Ray, who has You’ll Never Walk Alone tattooed on his left arm, lives in Brisbane with his Australian wife Angela, Liv and her two-year-old sister Paloma.

When I met up with them in Melbourne during this year’s Australian Open, Ray came across as a likeable and unassuming family man.

Yet, as he talks, you soon realise he is making some jaw-dropping claims.

“I think I could quite easily, over a 10 to 15-year period, create a champion in any sport,” he tells me by the outside courts, as the second round unfolds.

“Talent is made, it’s not born. I think if my Dad had spent the time with me at such a young age, I would have played for Liverpool. I would have played for England without a shadow of a doubt.”

Ray, 36, says he might have chosen another sport for his daughters. It didn’t have to be tennis.

“We could have gone down the route of ice-skating with Livi, and Livi would be a champion ice skater, but we chose the route of tennis and she’ll be a champion in that,” he says.

“I would put her up against any girl seven years of age around the globe and be confident she would beat them.”

Listen: Father believes daughters can be new Williams sisters

Liv, whose favourite players Serena Williams and Novak Djokovic are already world number one, first picked up a racquet at the age of three and is currently doing 12 hours of sport a week.

About two thirds of that is on the court, with the rest of the time devoted to gymnastics and athletics to build up her agility, balance and co-ordination.

Training begins while her friends are still sleeping and continues after school – as well as on Christmas Day.

“It just feels normal to me,” Liv explains.

“I hit on probably every celebration of the year. I feel a bit tired but when we start getting a little rally, I feel like I’ve got more energy to start moving around on the court.”

Tennis-free holidays, birthday parties and lollies are also part of Liv’s life and, once a week, Ray puts on a “fun” session in which his daughter tries to burst balloons with her serve.

“Sometimes he keeps it fun and sometimes he doesn’t,” Liv says.

“Sometimes he hits funny shots at me and sometimes I do trick shots at Daddy. Sometimes he serves with his right hand – he’s left-handed and I’m right-handed – and sometimes I hit with my left hand.”

Youngest female Grand Slam winners
Name Age Tournament
Martina Hingis 16 Australian Open 1997
Monica Seles 16 French Open 1990
Tracy Austin 16 US Open 1979
Maria Sharapova 17 Wimbledon 2004
Arantxa Sanchez 17 French Open 1989
Serena Williams 17 US Open 1999
Steffi Graf 17 French Open 1987

Ray, who is also a consultant to a large sports development firm, has drawn up a plan for both of his daughters that runs to more than 100 pages.

He believes the opportunity and coaching he is offering them – he now has tennis qualifications to add to his experience of working in elite level football – combined with the environment of Australia and a lot of hard work will turn them into champions.

Richard Williams has set the bar extraordinarily high with Venus and Serena, but Wood believes he can provide his girls with a higher quality of coaching in their early years.

“I think 99% of the population believe that if your dad is a lorry driver and your mum works in a bottle shop, then that’s pretty much all you’re going to do in life,” he says.

“There’s nothing wrong with having an office job, but we don’t want Liv to have an office job.

“We don’t want her to work 14 or 15-hour days. I can’t think of a better life than being out playing sport.

“I’ve been involved in a family who’ve had a lot of illnesses through various cancers, smoking and drinking and we want to ward the girls away from that.”

Liv, who is now on the books of an Australian talent agency which has also worked with Lleyton Hewitt, is currently playing against children three years her senior and winning far more than she loses.

Australia will be the family’s home for the next few years, but the long-term plan is to take them out of school, employ private tutors and possibly move to Spain.

The family has sent footage of Liv in action to the Rafa Nadal academy in Mallorca.

Even if the chance of both girls making it to the top are incredibly small, Paloma has already started gymnastics and will begin tennis in December at the age of two-and-a-half (18 months younger than her sister was).

The concept of pushing children so firmly down a specific route from such an early age will cause discomfort among some.

Ray is adamant, though, that neither girl will be forced to continue training against their will and believes he is acting in their interests and not out of frustration at the professional football career that eluded him.

“She wants to please Dad, without a shadow of a doubt,” he admits.

“But if you were to go into Liv’s bedroom, we don’t control anything in there. She’s got posters of all the players up there.

“We actually broke her off for six months just to see if she asked to do it again.

“The big focus we have is that if it’s not fun, the girls don’t do it.

“She understands she’s got to work hard and there are some sacrifices at a young age, but she already has a mindset that if she works hard, she’s going to get out of life what she wants.”

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Wawrinka Beats Rosol Highlights Roland Garros 2016

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

Wawrinka Beats Rosol Highlights Roland Garros 2016

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Troicki And Tipsarevic React To Djokovic 200 Weeks At No 1

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

Troicki And Tipsarevic React To Djokovic 200 Weeks At No 1

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Kerber loses in French Open first round

  • Posted: May 24, 2016
French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 22 May to 5 June
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, the BBC Sport website and app

Australian Open champion Angelique Kerber has been knocked out of the French Open in the first round by world number 58 Kiki Bertens.

The third seed, who has yet to advance past the quarter-finals at Roland Garros, lost 6-2 3-6 6-3.

The German, 28, struggled with a shoulder injury in the third set and went off court for treatment when trailing 3-0.

He Dutch opponent, who won in Nuremberg last week, duly completed her victory.

Bertens’ win means Andy Murray is now able to finish his match against Czech Radek Stepanek on Tuesday, which was suspended on Monday because of bad light, with the Briton trailing two sets to one.

Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Serena Williams and Victoria Azarenka are also in action on Tuesday.

Seventh seed Tomas Berdych brushed aside Vasek Pospisil in straight sets in the opening match on court one.

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After Battling Injuries, Healthy Tursunov Looks For Another Run

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

After Battling Injuries, Healthy Tursunov Looks For Another Run

Russian hopes injuries are finally behind him

Dmitry Tursunov could retire right now and know he’s enjoyed a career many can only wish they’d experienced. A brief bio: 14 ATP World Tour singles and doubles titles; a career-high No. 20 in the Emirates ATP Rankings; and a doubles semi-finals showing at this week’s Grand Slam, Roland Garros.

But Tursunov, who will turn 34 in December, also knows if he left now, after 30 years of playing tennis and multiple injuries that have hampered his career, he might wonder if he had a few more matches or titles in him. He might think he left too soon.

“I’ve already played tennis for 30 years of my life, so I want to use up whatever time I have left. If it’s going to be one year, it’s going to be one year. If it’s going to be two years, it’s going to be two years,” Tursunov said in April in Houston. “But in 10-15 years, I really don’t want to sit back and look and say, ‘OK, I should have played for one more year or I should have played for two more years.’”

The Russian is scheduled to play in his 12th Roland Garros singles main draw this week when he opens against 14th seed Roberto Bautista Agut. In Paris, Tursunov, a 17-year tour veteran, will look to take full advantage of his experience to produce another run on tour.

“I see tennis a little bit more as a chess game versus when I was younger it was more physical, just hitting the ball, whether you make the shot or don’t make the shot,” he said. “Now I see a little bit more of the tactical things, and I like to explore it.”

A lack of strategy hasn’t been Tursunov’s problem. Rather, injuries have slowed the right-hander throughout his career.

In 2000, the year he turned pro, Tursunov broke his left leg and missed five months. Two years later, a back injury sidelined him for half the year. But in 2003, Tursunov, at the age of 20, cracked the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings. Three years later, he had his first tour-level title, beating Tomas Berdych in the final in Mumbai. That same year, Tursunov also finished in the Top 25 for the first time. He’d hover around the Top 30 and win at least one title for the next three years.

Toward the end of 2009, however, the injuries would return. During the next two years, he’d undergo three surgeries on his left ankle. By 2011, his ranking would slip to No. 197.

In typical Tursunov fashion, though, he was back inside the Top 30 in 2013. As a qualifier, he reached the quarter-finals of the Western & Southern Open, the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament in Cincinnati. Tursunov beat then-World No. 4 David Ferrer before losing to World No. 7 Juan Martin del Potro in three sets.

Yet just when the Moscow native was again making strides, plantar fasciitis and a combination of injuries bothered him on and off again for the next three years. “You go through a few hiccups and stutter steps and you have some new injuries that come up because you haven’t been playing a lot,” he said. “You try to play at the same level or at the same speed that you know you should be playing. and your body is just not quite ready. It takes a while for it to adapt to stress.”

The stop-and-go nature of rehab also challenged him mentally. “You have to be not only patient but also determined to keep going,” he said. “A lot of times when you’re coming back it’s pretty tough psychologically. Physically, you feel like you’re just 10,000 years old.”

But Tursunov also said he’s learned from his time off the court. He’s thought of things he would have done differently when he was younger. He plans to pass that insight along to the next generation of players.

“If I had the opportunity to travel with a physio from an early age maybe it would be different, maybe it wouldn’t be,” he said. “I could have maybe not played the tournaments that I might have played when I was feeling like I’m hurting, and I felt like I was a gladiator and going through all this pain, and it was a good thing.

“But in the end it doesn’t really matter, the best that I can do with that knowledge of my past mistakes is to pass that knowledge along.”

Tursunov, the son of a former engineer turned tennis coach, talks about coaching some day and putting his years of experience to use. But he has something else on his mind at the moment, something he’d like to happen at Roland Garros and for the remainder of the season.

“I think nowadays more than anything,” he said, “it’s important for me to be able to play relatively injury free.”

Moet and Chandon off-court news 

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Djokovic, Murray And Nadal On Deck For Tuesday At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

Djokovic, Murray And Nadal On Deck For Tuesday At Roland Garros

The trio headline a busy Day Three of play

Rain on the first two days of play at Roland Garros is resulting in an action-packed Day Three, with Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal all scheduled for play on Tuesday.

Murray and qualifier Radek Stepanek are the second the match of the day on Court Philippe Chatrier, as they resume their encounter from Monday. Play was called off due to darkness with Stepanek leading 6-3, 6-3, 0-6, 2-4.

Immediately following that match is No. 1 seed Novak Djokovic, who begins his quest for the career Grand Slam against Yen-Hsun Lu. No. 6 seed and local favourite Jo-Wilfried Tsonga will finish out play for the men on Court Philippe Chatrier when he takes on qualifier Jan-Lennard Struff of Germany.

View Tuesday Schedule

No. 4 seed and nine-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal opens his campaign on Court Suzanne Lenglen against Australian Sam Groth. No. 11 seed David Ferrer takes to that court later to face Evgeny Donskoy of Russia.

An intriguing first-round match opens up play on Court 1 as No. 7 seed Tomas Berdych goes up against Vasek Pospisil. No. 12 seed David Goffin is looking to make a deep run this year and starts his campaign off against French wildcard Gregoire Barrere, while No. 12 seed Dominic Thiem highlights play on Court 2 against Inigo Cervantes of Spain. 

Two matches suspended due to darkness are also scheduled to resume Tuesday. No. 15 seed John Isner is even with Australian John Millman at 6-7(4), 7-6(12), while No. 29 seed Lucas Pouille leads Julien Benneteau in their all-French battle 6-3, 4-6, 6-4.

In addition, two all-NextGen matches are scheduled for Tuesday. French wild card Quentin Halys takes on Hyeon Chung of Korea, while Borna Coric of Croatia squares off against American Taylor Fritz.

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Cilic Falls To Qualifier At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

Cilic Falls To Qualifier At Roland Garros

Croat falls to World No. 166

Tenth seed Marin Cilic is out at Roland Garros. The World No. 11 fell to Argentine qualifier Marco Trungelliti 7-6(4), 3-6, 6-4, 6-2. Trungelliti, No. 166 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, broke the Croat seven times to earn his second win at a Grand Slam.

The 26-year-old Buenos Aires resident, who was making his Roland Garros debut, had qualified and reached the second round of the 2016 Australian Open. He will face Horacio Zeballos or Albert Ramos-Vinolas in the second round.

Cilic seemed prepared to reach the second round at Roland Garros for the fifth consecutive year. The 27 year old made the final of the Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open on Saturday, losing to Stan Wawrinka in two competitive sets. Earlier in the season, however, the Grand Slam champion had struggled with an injury to his right knee that forced him to miss three clay-court ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments.

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Murray One Set From Defeat Against Stepanek

  • Posted: May 24, 2016

Murray One Set From Defeat Against Stepanek

The No. 2 seed is starting to rebound after dropping the first two sets.

No. 2 seed Andy Murray is rallying from a slow start to his opening round at Roland Garros against qualifier Radek Stepanek, but will have to wait until Tuesday to finish the match. Play on Monday was called off due to darkness with Stepanek leading 6-3, 6-3, 0-6, 2-4.

The oldest player in the draw at age 37, Stepanek belied his years in the first two sets of the match with crafty hitting and timely trips to the net that put Murray out of his comfort zone, winning both sets by a 6-3 scoreline. The British player rebounded strongly by recording a 6-0 shutout third set and grabbing an early break of serve to start the fourth set.

Should Stepanek win, it would be his first victory over a Top 5 player since defeating Murray at the ATP World Tour 500 event in London in June 2014. 

Murray last came back from two sets down in a Grand Slam at last year’s US Open, where he defeated Adrian Mannarino in the second round. He hasn’t lost in the opening round of a Grand Slam since the 2008 Australian Open and at Roland Garros since 2006. Murray has won his past 31 first-round matches at Grand Slams. 

Two other men’s matches, including No. 29 seed Lucas Rouille against Julien Benneteau and No. 15 seed John Isner versus John Millman, were also suspended due to darkness. Both of those matches are scheduled to resume on Tuesday.

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